
Life with a smartphone is like having a second brain in your pocket
Where there was once soul and body, now there’s also a phone.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Where there was once soul and body, now there’s also a phone.
ByLondon side Brentford FC are using data to rethink the usual football club model.
ByPeter Conradi’s Who Lost Russia? How the World Entered a New Cold War traces the accumulation of distrust between the…
ByFor all his business acumen, Pieter the Younger was no original and his skill was weedy compared to the…
ByAlthough Corbyn is safe, all factions in the party are searching for his successor.
ByGender identity is now embedded in many people’s self-perception, as well as in day-to-day bureaucracy.
ByNight after night, activists gather in Victory Square to demand the resignation of the government.
ByWhitney Terrell's third novel is a powerful, and sometimes heartbreaking, war story.
ByThis Is Memorial Device vividly recalls the teen years of the post-punk generation. I'm just not sure I wanted to…
ByThere's been a lot of discussion about narcissists this week. But what does the term actually mean?
ByThis week in the media, from Trump’s utter incompetence to how I survived the Great Lettuce Crisis.
ByNew books from Elif Shafak, Rory MacLean and Howard Jacobson.
ByBeware young fogeys.
ByWe think the planet's fish are rightfully ours. But the brown pelican is known to snatch fish from other…
ByIn A Really Good Day, Ayelet Waldman tells her story of self-medicating with LSD.
ByJohn Shannon's trainers, a sleeping Johnson, and the well-beaten path from Auntie to the Tories.
ByPerformances by Angela Gheorghiu and Jonas Kaufmann provide the perfect opportunity to reflect on operatic star power.
ByThat General Flynn was the first of the president’s men to fall should perhaps not have caused surprise.
ByThe Scientologists sent me to prison – but I still have a particle of admiration for their ways.
ByInstead of owning things, we are renting experiences.
ByNow, for my biggest donation yet . . .
ByGoverning from the Skies by Thomas Hippler examines the changing role of aerial bombing.
ByAs unrest grows in Stormont, the alliance between the DUP and Theresa May's Conservatives may yet cause problems in…
ByIn From Bacteria to Bach and Back, Daniel C Dennett investigates the evolution of consciousness.
ByThe attacks on the Speaker are about traditionalism, tribalism and anger at his political journey.
ByIf journalism is to survive, it needs either to cut costs (read: sack journalists), or build revenues.
ByMy week, from finding a way through the fog to getting the quarterly audience figures.
ByWith people now free to circumvent the big studios, different bodies, tastes and even pubic hair styles are being…
ByKapka Kassabova’s Border: a Journey to the Edge of Europe is a timely, powerful story of immigration, friendship and travel.
ByIn Britain, it used to be vulgar to comment on one’s food. Now, it’s a bit weird not to.
ByWhen a medium acquires new functions, it will need to be adapted by means of creating new forms.
BySport’s obsession with being “inspirational” doesn't help public-health interventions – it hinders them.
ByIn essence, the show is just Dexter meets Desperate Housewives: think shiny kitchens splattered with industrial quantities of ketchup. Plus: The Great British…
ByWhere once the nation would listen to radio events together, now, it is the booming podcast market that commands…
ByBarry Jenkins’s story of a boy who finds a father figure in a local drug dealer shows, in minute…
By“Often people say it’s the best thing they ever ate,” someone warned.
By“I want to see Yahya Jammeh jailed and prosecuted in this country. Justice will finally come.”
ByMental health problems are no excuse for bigotry and abuse - even if you're the president.
ByHow long will Labour be content to walk by on the other side, and leave others to determine our…
ByIs this a post-liberal moment? Must these new times be associated with the ascendancy of the right?
ByThe grammars and "comprehensives" of Kent make for an unequal system. So why does Theresa May consider the county…
ByWhatever reshuffle is confirmed, Purnell will also be spoken about as a potential BBC director general.
ByPolitically, the choice is presented as static and binary: austerity or infrastructure spending. What we really need is bold…
ByToo many of us have learned to measure our democratic impact in retweets and Facebook Likes, or at best,…
ByIn all of the new left's urgent, bottom-up energy, the danger is cacophony and not symphony. A new form…
ByConventional class-consciousness has been overtaken by collective resentment. We must face the fact Labour as we know it may…
ByThe mustering of Bernie’s and Donald’s armies, along with the Brexit vote, may signify the end of the neoliberal…
ByThe social divide between old, working-class voters and young graduates in the British left is more marked than ever. Labour's catch-22…
ByWith financial turmoil, the vote share of social democratic parties has fallen across western Europe. The new challenge for…
ByExistential crisis is the new normal on the left – so it's time to decide what type of existentialism to…
ByThe ghosts of when Labour was split and impotent outside local government still rattle around in the collective memory.…
ByThe three aspects of Labour's disaster – doctrine, history and sense of purpose – add up to a fourth,…
ByI wish those people who talk about a “long game” would realise that every second the Tory government remains…
ByThe digital revolution has had two profound effects on how power is distributed – both of which squeeze the…
ByWhen Labour lurched to the left under Michael Foot, James Callaghan warned the Party of their obligation to work as…
ByThe right side does not always win, and history rarely affords second chances. It's time for the British left…
ByMiliband explains why credible values are the bedrock of radicalism – and why not everyone who disagrees with Corbyn is…
ByTo change the country we must first change ourselves, creating a political culture that is much more open, capable…
ByIf the 1980s were a time when the global market was expanding, our time is one in which globalisation…
ByMy week, from spying on the spies to Theresa May’s fashion charm offensive – and how Sadiq stole hearts.
ByWhen 21-year-old Alfie Deyes released his first book, it was No 1 on the Sunday Times bestseller list for 11 weeks. Who…
ByA Negroni is the aperitif of choice in bars everywhere from London to Palermo - and no wonder.
ByLittle Men reminds us that Sachs is the the cinematic poet laureate of the gentrification drama.
By“It’s like Trevor’s on a tightrope,” said my boyfriend, “but the tightrope is only a foot above the ground”.
ByI write this, at 3.04pm on a sticky Thursday afternoon, in the state in which Adam, before his shame, strolled in the…
ByWhy is the Owen Smith campaign asking for money? Plus: the Lib Dem villege fete, and why Emily Thornberry…
ByAleppo once housed the greatest souk in the Levant, but now it’s a city in ruins and the people…
ByThe world according to Martin Jacques, the return of the state, and why we're tackling the new “New Times”.
ByRepresentatives in the Russian parliament, the Duma, have long been unpopular. Yet President Putin is immune to voter's discontent.
ByMarina Benjamin on the curious logic of modern identity politics.
ByWhy the sudden glut of blond footballers? A conversation I had with the artist back in 1966 gave me…
ByThe next great stage of our evolution has begun. But what will our successes look like – and will they…
ByThe rise of English identity has left a glaring space in politics for an English nationalist party. Who is going…
ByMeetings With Remarkable Manuscripts by Christopher de Hamel allows us to see inside the books most of us will…
ByThe story of a disgraced light entertainer, written with a light touch by Jack Thorne, is the most challenging…
ByWith fake meetings about fake covers, the documentary gave a glimpse into the abyss at the heart of the fashion…
ByThe breakfast show on 102.5 FM Sportiva blasts from windows and my friend Lucia sucks her teeth as we…
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